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Lookup NU author(s): Dr Gabriel Martinez VeraORCiD
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).
While differences in the production and acceptability of aspectual inflectional morphology between Spanish–English heritage and monolingually raised speakers of Spanish have been argued to support incomplete acquisition approaches to heritage language acquisition, other approaches have argued that differences in access (e.g., lexical access) to representations for receptive and productive purposes are at the core of some of the unique characteristics of heritage language data. We investigate these issues by focusing on the effects of lexical access, dominance, age of acquisition and patterns of language use in heritage Spanish–English bilinguals. We study aspectual se in Spanish, which yields telic interpretations, in expressions such as María se comió la manzana ‘María ate the apple (completely)’ and Maria ate the apple (where completion may not be reached). Our results indicate that se generates telic interpretations for the heritage and monolingually raised group with no group effect. Heritage speakers showed no English effects in terms of lexical access, age of acquisition, patterns of language use or dominance. This suggests that the heritage group did not differ from their monolingually raised counterparts and showed no evidence of incomplete acquisition of telicity.
Author(s): Martínez Vera G, Lopez Otero JC, Sokolova M, Cleveland A, Marshall MT, Sánchez L
Publication type: Article
Publication status: Published
Journal: Languages
Year: 2023
Volume: 8
Issue: 3
Online publication date: 29/08/2023
Acceptance date: 15/08/2023
Date deposited: 06/10/2023
ISSN (electronic): 2226-471X
Publisher: MDPI
URL: https://doi.org/10.3390/languages8030201
DOI: 10.3390/languages8030201
Data Access Statement: The IRB required data to be kept confidential.
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